Method:

Marinate the chicken, mushrooms, and chopped scallion with all the ingredients in the Marinade for about 30 minutes. Heat up a wok or skillet with the cooking oil.

Stir-fry the Chinese lap cheong or sausage until aromatic.

Add the Chinese sausage (together with the oil in the wok) to the chicken and mushrooms. Stir to blend well.

Heat up a pot of water and bring it to boil. Scald/blanch the lotus leaf with the boiling water until it becomes soft.

Wipe both sides of the leaves dry with paper towels and place the chicken in the middle of the leaf.

Fold the sides up and wrap it tightly into a parcel. (Make sure it’s fold tight to avoid the juice from the steamed chicken chicken from leaking out.) Lay it on a deep plate and prepare to steam.

Steam the chicken parcel for about 25-30 minutes or until all the chicken pieces are cooked through. Unwrap the parcel and serve the steamed chicken immediately with steamed rice.

I have always loved sticky rice wrapped in lotus leaf (荷叶饭), commonly available at Cantonese dim sum restaurants. I love the earthy aroma lotus leaves impart to the dish, and most of all, I love it that the leaves retain the moisture and natural flavors of the ingredients. The leafy nuance and fragrance complement and not compete with the preparation. Lotus leaf is really wonderful and I wonder why it’s not as widely used in home-cooking as it should be. So, I decided to purchase a pack of lotus leaf and try it out in my everyday Chinese cooking.

I used the lotus leaf to make steamed chicken—a common Chinese dish. After the first bite of the deeply flavorful and nicely-scented chicken, I have only regretted it has taken me this long to attempt using lotus leaf in my kitchen, when it was fairly easy and so convenient. With the experiment last night, I resolve to use it more and a few ideas have popped-up in my mind: sticky rice, salt-baked chicken, steamed spare ribs, and maybe even beggar’s chicken. I am so thrilled with the many possibilities…

Below is my steamed chicken recipe. You can make the steamed chicken regularly without wrapping it with lotus leaves, but trust me, once you do it this way, you will probably never go back to the plain version.

Whoa, that looks so good and definitely reminds me of 2 of my favorite dishes at a dim sum restaraunt. I live in Baltimore and haven’t been able to find lap cheong anywhere, do you know if they allowed to sell them online? I’ve looked on amazon but doesn’t quite look right. Anyhow, love your blog and this recipe looks so delicious.

Hi Bee, are dried lotus leaves easier to handle than fresh ones? I have seen the dried ones sold at Chinese medical halls and I am wondering if after soaking, they would be more pliable than the fresh leaves…

I love this dish, just wondering why not making it recently. I should better take yours as a reminder, thanks.

While dried lotus leaves are popular here for preparing different dishes, we also like to cook the fresh ones with winter melon as a soup during summer, which is said to help reduce dampness and heat in our bodies : ).